Photography as a Way of Life: Minor White, Aaron Siskind, and Harry Callahan, on view from April 18 through September 7, 2026, offers a thoughtful examination of three figures who reshaped American photography in the mid-twentieth century. More than a historical survey, the exhibition considers photography as a lifelong discipline—an intellectual, spiritual, and creative pursuit that informed how these artists lived, taught, and understood the world around them.
Working during a period dominated by popular snapshot culture and fast-paced photojournalism,
Minor White,
Aaron Siskind, and
Harry Callahan charted a different path. Their images favor introspection over spectacle, abstraction over description, and personal vision over assignment-driven narratives. Whether through White’s meditative sequences, Siskind’s engagement with surface and form, or Callahan’s intimate studies of urban space and family life, each artist sought meaning beyond the visible subject, using photography as a tool for self-inquiry and perception.
Equally significant is their role as educators. As photography entered universities and art schools, these three artists became central to shaping how the medium was taught and understood. Through workshops, publications, and classrooms, they encouraged students to see photography not merely as a technical skill, but as a way of thinking and being. Their influence extended far beyond their own work, helping to define generations of photographers who embraced experimentation, discipline, and personal expression.
Drawing from the Princeton University Art Museum’s extensive collections and the Minor White Archive, the exhibition brings together vintage prints, rarely seen color works, slides, and archival materials. These objects reveal the breadth of their practices and the networks of exchange—between teaching, publishing, and exhibition—that sustained their careers. The inclusion of unpublished and lesser-known works deepens our understanding of how ideas evolved across decades of sustained inquiry.
Ultimately,
Photography as a Way of Life reflects on a moment when photography claimed a new status within American art and education. Through the intertwined legacies of White, Siskind, and Callahan, the exhibition affirms photography as a lifelong commitment—one capable of shaping not only images, but entire ways of seeing and living.
Image:
Allen Chen | Aaron Siskind, Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation 37 (detail), 1953. Princeton University Art Museum. Gift of Robert A. Wayne, Class of 1960. © Aaron Siskind/Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.